Your Name
Makoto Shinkai is a director with a reputation for making a particular type of film. The common through line which thematically entwines his work is an emphasis on distance—physical, emotional, temporal or otherwise. His protagonists are predominantly adolescents, that awkward middle-ground between youth and adulthood, who grapple with the unique mix of stifled longing, gnawing uncertainty, and ennui that so well defines that tumultuous period of life. His films are stories told within the space between chance encounters and missed connections, gracefully edited to mine the many peaks and valleys which define the landscape of human drama. He is, to put it frankly, one of the most inimitable anime directors of his time.
His latest film, Your Name, is another virtuosic turn for the rising director, taking the timeworn trope of “star-crossed lovers” of which Shinkai is so fond for and literalizing it in the form of Mitsuha Miyamizu and Taki Tachibana, two Japanese high-schoolers who wake up to find their bodies and minds switched in the weeks leading up to a mysterious celestial event that occurs only once every twelve-hundred years. Gender and body-swapping are anything but unbroken ground in anime (see: Ranma ½), but Shinkai brings a characteristic tinge of fatalism and hapless comic infrequency to the mix that not only sets the film apart from its campy genre ilk, but distinguishes itself as his most upbeat effort, skewing apart from the more maudlin idiosyncrasies and indulgences which tend to frequently crop up across his body of work.
Each of the protagonists is yearning for something. For Mitsuha, raised in the shadow of her overbearing father and burdened by the expectations of her family’s traditions, it’s to leave the sleepy rural mountain town of Itomori and venture out into the liberating excitement of Tokyo. For Taki, a skilled draftsmen and average student living in the city, it’s to seize upon the courage to pursue not only romance but meaning as he matures into adulthood. Through their random transferences, Taki and Mitsuha grow closer to one another and themselves, sharing their most intimate of thoughts and feelings as both their hearts and fates become steadily intertwined in a bid to not only close the gaps of space and time, but also to defy the cruel indifference of fate itself. The plot takes point at highlighting the disparity between the lived experiences of gender, demystifying the supposed “mystery of the opposite sex” to reveal two achingly human people who want most what they seemingly cannot have. So really, fairly typical fare for Shinkai, though played out across a far broader spectrum of emotion apart from his default modes set between “melancholic” and “spurned by fate.”
-
Tatsuki Fujimoto 17-26 Polishes These Adapted Short Stories To a Fine Sheen By Elijah Gonzalez November 7, 2025 | 9:15am
-
Star Wars: Visions Volume 3 Is A Fun Ride But Doesn't Quite Match Its Predecessors By Elijah Gonzalez October 31, 2025 | 11:00am
-
Chainsaw Man – The Movie: Reze Arc Is at Its Best When at Its Most Intimate By Farouk Kannout October 22, 2025 | 1:00am
-
100 Meters Asks if You Can Find the Meaning of Life in a 10 Second Sprint By Elijah Gonzalez October 20, 2025 | 9:30am
-
Scarlet Offers Complicated Answers To Simple Questions By Autumn Wright October 13, 2025 | 10:50am
-
Junk World Revives A Cult Stop-Motion Sci-Fi Series With More Polish But No Less Madness By Reuben Baron September 16, 2025 | 2:15pm
-
Pokémon Concierge Is Back With Another Extremely Cuddly Vacation By Elijah Gonzalez September 4, 2025 | 9:30am
-
Mononoke The Movie: Chapter II – The Ashes of Rage Is A Fiery Indictment Of Past Wrongs By Elijah Gonzalez August 14, 2025 | 3:00am
-
Alternate History Anime Leviathan Mostly Overcomes Familiarity With Sweeping Sights By Elijah Gonzalez July 1, 2025 | 9:00am
-
The Colors Within Captures the Everyday Magic of Music By Elijah Gonzalez January 24, 2025 | 11:45am
-
Netflix’s Well-Animated Terminator Zero Starts Strong Before Breaking Down By Elijah Gonzalez August 29, 2024 | 3:00am
-
Stunning Anime Look Back Appreciates the Work of Art By Autumn Wright July 12, 2024 | 10:00am
-
Studio Ponoc Outdoes John Krasinski in the Sweet Anime The Imaginary By Jesse Hassenger July 4, 2024 | 10:00am
-
Ghost in the Shell 2: Innocence Still Feels Like Unsurpassed Cyberpunk By Autumn Wright June 26, 2024 | 12:30pm
-
Ultraman: Rising Is an Ode to the Heroics of Parenthood By Elijah Gonzalez June 7, 2024 | 12:02pm
-
My Oni Girl Is a Pleasant but Unremarkable Coming-of-Age Journey By Elijah Gonzalez May 23, 2024 | 11:44am
-
The Grimm Variations Offers a Provocative Spin on Well-Worn Folklore By Elijah Gonzalez April 17, 2024 | 10:35am
-
Maboroshi Captures the Pain of Messy Memories and Endless Adolescence By Elijah Gonzalez January 25, 2024 | 2:30pm
-
Netflix’s Live-Action Yu Yu Hakusho Can’t Conjure the Fighting Spirit of the Original By Elijah Gonzalez December 14, 2023 | 10:15am
-
The Boy and the Heron Is Miyazaki’s Masterwork By Autumn Wright December 8, 2023 | 2:55am
-
Scott Pilgrim Takes Off Is a Breezy Reimagining That Hits the Right Notes By Elijah Gonzalez November 17, 2023 | 3:01am
-
Suzume Is a Familiar Tale of Mourning from Makoto Shinkai By Autumn Wright November 16, 2023 | 1:30am
-
In Netflix's Heartrending Pluto, Androids Dream of Much More Than Electric Sheep By Elijah Gonzalez October 26, 2023 | 11:15am
-
Netflix’s Live Action Spin on One Piece Sails Past Expectations By Elijah Gonzalez August 31, 2023 | 3:01am
-
The First Slam Dunk's Basketball Thrills Balance Flash and Fundamentals By Jacob Oller July 28, 2023 | 11:50am
-
Resident Evil: Death Island Fails To Reanimate the Series’ Action-Horror Thrills By Elijah Gonzalez July 27, 2023 | 12:34pm
-
Lonely Castle in the Mirror Is an Unflattering Reflection of Its Novel By Autumn Wright June 22, 2023 | 2:00pm
-
Jazz Anime Blue Giant Hits the High Notes By Autumn Wright April 29, 2023 | 1:23am
-
Well-Executed Anime Prequel Jujutsu Kaisen 0 Is Cursed by Familiarity By Jacob Oller September 23, 2022 | 2:15pm
-
The Ephemeral Boys of Summer Lead Lovely Anime Goodbye, Don Glees! By Autumn Wright September 14, 2022 | 2:00pm
-
Uninspiring Anime The House of the Lost on the Cape Takes on Real Japanese Disaster By Autumn Wright September 7, 2022 | 1:25pm
-
Triumphant Anime Musical Inu-Oh Sees Rock Span the Ages By Max Covill August 10, 2022 | 1:30pm
-
Ambitious, Gripping Anime The Deer King Tries to Rule over Too Much By Max Covill July 13, 2022 | 10:00am
-
Post-Apocalyptic Parkour Anime Bubble Pops off the Screen, but Is Transparently Thin By Max Covill April 28, 2022 | 1:15pm
-
Demon Gaze EXTRA Is a Rough Anime Gem for People Who Didn't Own a Vita By Dia Lacina January 28, 2022 | 1:35pm
-
A VR Pop Star Takes on Beauty and the Beast in the Triumphant Belle By Max Covill January 13, 2022 | 11:33am
-
The Summit of the Gods Is a Breathtaking Adaptation of a Mountaineering Manga By Jacob Oller November 24, 2021 | 9:00am
-
Netflix's Cowboy Bebop Fundamentally Misunderstands What Made the Original So Cool By Austin Jones November 15, 2021 | 2:01am
-
Disney+'s Imaginative Star Wars: Visions Finally Acknowledges Japan's Influence on Star Wars By Kenneth Lowe September 22, 2021 | 10:12am
-
Evangelion 3.0+1.0: Thrice Upon a Time Chases the Perfect Ending By August 17, 2021 | 10:06am